State ex rel. Pack v. Hill

408 S.W.2d 213, 56 Tenn. App. 410, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 11, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 408 S.W.2d 213 (State ex rel. Pack v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Pack v. Hill, 408 S.W.2d 213, 56 Tenn. App. 410, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 233 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

AVERY, P.J.

(W.S.). This is a condemnation suit filed by the State of Tennessee to acquire an area for the right-of-way for the construction of a by-pass of the town of Trenton on Highway 45W, crossing Highway 104, and reentering highway 45’W, for which right-of-way the State had appraisals and paid into Court $3,250 in accord with T.C.A. Section 23-1528 et seq., over the lands of respondent-defendant, Mrs. Otto (Tollie) Hill.

[412]*41245W runs generally northwest and southeast. This bypass involved is located generally in a northeastérly direction from the original 45W as the by-pass circles around the Town of Trenton in that direction, and crosses Highway 104 which traverses the heart of the Town of Trenton. From Trenton this Highway 104 extends east to Milan and west to Dyersburg. The distance of this bypass is not relevant, however, it extends from its east exit from 45W, east of central heart of Trenton in a northwesterly circular direction along the Old Jackson-Trenton Eoad crossing State Highway 104, and reenters Highway 45W some distance west of Trenton. The area here involved lies along the Old Jackson Eoad and east of Highway 104.

The entire involved tract containing about 59 acres marched with the east side of the Old Jackson Highway its entire length of about 2425 feet. This by-pass crosses the Old J ackson Eoad at about 1600 feet from the southwest corner of this tract of land, and the southwest boundary of the tract about 825 feet from its northwest corner, cutting off from the main remaining portion of the respondent’s land, along that Old Jackson Eoad, containing about 2.90 acres between the by-pass and the Old J ackson Eoad.

3.53 acres are embraced in the highway by-pass. The dwelling and barn, both in a dilapidated condition, are located on the 2.90 acres. No one lives in the residence except some elderly gentleman who occupies just a part of it as a sort of charity shelter.

A plat identified as Exhibit 1 of the petitioner, shows how this tract is affected by the by-pass. It is known as tract No. 12, and so is this roadway with 3.53 acres, together with the non-access area and the little tract cut [413]*413off containing 2.90 acres, leaving approximately 52.57 acres in the tract on which there is no barn or residence.

The ease was tried before the Court and jury on exceptions to the value, fixed under the provisions of T.C.A. Sections above referred to, and there was a jury verdict in favor of the owner of the land for the value of land taken of $4,250 and for incidental damage to the remaining lands, less any incidental benefits, of $6,500.

The proof by witnesses for the landowner is shown in the record to be about as follows:

Mr. Ed Hamilton, value of land $3,600.
Incidental benefit off-set incidental damages.
Lyle Putman, value of land taken $6,000,
estimated incidental damage 19,000
Happel Hunt, value of land taken $7,000
estimated incidental damage 7,000
Mrs. Otto Hill, value of land taken $10,000
estimated incidental damage 20,000
Gf-len Hurt, son-in-law of Mrs. Hill,
Value of land taken $10,000
Estimated incidental damage 15,000

The method in which Mr. Hamilton was examined and the manner in which he testified, appears to this Court that whatever he may have said about incidental damages, he contradicted himself in two or three ways. He positively testified that in his opinion the incidental damages were off-set by incidental benefits. He said this more than once during his testimony. The valuation put upon the land taken by Mrs. Hill, the owner of the land, and by Mr. Grlen Hurt, her son-in-law, each of whom fixed [414]*414the value of the 3.53 acres taken, at $10,000, is so far out of line with the highest figure of the value of the land taken, as testified by the disinterested witnesses, Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Putman and Mr. Hunt, that but little, if any, consideration can be given it, though apparently Mr. Hurt qualified to the satisfaction of the trial Court, as a competent witness to value land, and by law Mrs. Hill is made a competent witness.

For the purpose of this opinion the real values which we consider proper for us to even relate, are those of the witnesses for the landowner, who are Hamilton, Putman and Hunt. The combined total of the three evaluations by these witnesses would be $16,600 for the land taken, and on the basis of an average valuation of disinterested witnesses we have an average estimated value for that acreage of $5,533, or approximately $1,600 per acre.

These witnesses for the land owner fixed incidental damages as hereinafter set out, with the exception of the witness, Mr. Hamilton, and his testimony, as is said, is susceptible to different interpretations, so we have the following figures on incidental damages by Mr. Putman of $19,000; by the witness Happel Hunt, as we understand his evidence, of $7,000; Mrs. Otto Hill $20,000 and Mr. Glen Hurt of $15,000.

In arriving at these figures which we show in this opinion, we have tried to take into consideration Avhat these witnesses said about the values before and after taking the area for the road, of the whole 59 acres, and the value of that which is left. So if we give consideration to what has been said by Mr. Lyle Putman and Mr. Happel Hunt, we have a combined figure of $19,000 and $7,000 or $26,000 Incidental damages. It is tremendously doubtful that Mr. Putman meant to fix any such incidental damage figure at [415]*415$19,000, and perhaps meant that figure to include value of land taken and incidental damage. However, the average of these two would be $13,000 for the incidental damages.

It is our opinion all of these witnesses testified as though there was a ready market value for every lot that could be cut out of the whole 59 acres, at the present time, and as though there were gravel roads, water and everything else laid out within it. We doubt seriously if any fair and reasonable figure could be arrived at in that manner. We have given no consideration to the incidental damage figures set by Mrs. Hill and Mr. Hurt, for it appears to us that the verdict of the jury was such that they gave no consideration to them whatever, neither as to the value of the property as a whole, nor the value of the remaining property as fixed by Mr. Hurt, or to any figure of incidental damages that either of them gave. They saw these witnesses and heard them testify.

Now opposed to these figures we have the values of land and the estimate of incidental damages, as fixed by three witnesses that testified for the State. Mr. Harry Searl fixed the value of the land taken at $500.00 per acre or $1,765. He fixed the incidental damages and explained why he did so, at $1,500. Mr. Marion Holmes fixed the value of the land taken at $1,412. He fixed the incidental damages at $1,768.16. Mr. Bobert Freeman fixed the value of the land taken at $1,765 and explained how he did that, and he fixed the incidental damage at $1,593.63, an average of $1,645, this approximates $500.00 an acre. For the average values of incidental damages of these three witnesses same is approximately $1,883.

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Related

Davis v. State
773 S.W.2d 404 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1989)
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438 S.W.2d 754 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
408 S.W.2d 213, 56 Tenn. App. 410, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pack-v-hill-tennctapp-1965.